Anselm Kiefer

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Anselm Kiefer is regarded as one of the most important and influential artists working today. Anselm Kiefer (born March 8, 1945, Donaueschingen) is a German painter and sculptor. He studied with Joseph Beuys during the 1970s. His works incorporate materials like straw, ash, clay, lead, and shellac. The poems of Paul Celan have played a role in developing Kiefer’s themes of German history and the horror of the Holocaust, as have the theological concepts of Kabbalah.

Kiefer ranks among the best-known and most successful, but also most disputed German artists after World War II. In his entire body of work, Kiefer argues with the past and addresses taboo and controversial issues from recent history. Themes from Nazi rule are particularly reflected in his work; for instance, the painting “Margarethe” (oil and straw on canvas) was inspired by Paul Celan’s well-known poem “Todesfuge” (”Death Fugue”). Polemical discussions in the media over the value of his artistic work have taken place for many decades.
His works are characterised by a dull/musty, nearly depressive, destructive style and are often done in large scale formats. In most of his works, the use of photography as an output surface is prevalent and earth and other raw materials of nature are often incorporated. It is also characteristic of his work to find signatures and/or names of humans, legendary figures or places particularly pregnant with history in nearly all of his paintings. All of these are encoded sigils through which Kiefer seeks to process the past; this often gets him linked with a style called “New Symbolism.”

Nathan Oliveiria

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Nathan Oliveira (born December 19, 1928) is an American painter, printmaker, and sculptor, born in Oakland, California. He is a celebrated and long-standing member of the art community in the San Francisco Bay Area. He is a painter who has lived in that area all his life, and is recently retired from a long teaching career at Stanford University.  As an artist, he came into national prominence in 1959 when he was included in the New York Museum of Modern Art ’s New Images of Man, the exhibition that heralded a new life for figurative art after a period of almost total dominance by Abstract Expressionism.

Brisson, Pierre Marie

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Born June 1955 in Orléans. Brisson is one of Europe’s most talented young contemporary artists. With simplified figures and extensive texturing, Brisson’s works have been compared to cave drawings. Their timeless appearances represent a kind of archeological dig for the artist: he cuts, scratches and pierces the multi-layered surfaces of his canvases to reveal his images from within the strata of these materials. Brisson’s original and graphic artworks have been the subject of numerous gallery and museum exhibitions throughout Western Europe, North America, and Japan. He now lives between San Francisco, Paris and Nîmes, near the Scamandre vines that he helped establish amongst the ranks of the great Rhone valley wines.

Manuel Neri

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Manuel Neri was born in 1930 in Sanger, California. Neri attended San Francisco City College from 1949-50 with the idea of becoming an electrical engineer. A single class in ceramics turned him to art and a move to California College of Arts and Crafts and subsequent studies at California School of Fine Arts (now the San Francisco Art Institute). Studies with such artists as Elmer Bischoff and Richard Diebenkorn led him to abstract expressionism, but a radical turnabout occurred in the 1950s. “I would say that I did a U-turn in my art in 1955 when I saw my first child being born,” he says. “It was a fantastic moment. I realized then that the female body has the magic. The male may have the power, but the female has the magic.” Neri is known primarily for his life-size figurative sculptures in plaster, bronze, and marble, as well as for his association with the Bay Area Figurative movement during the 1950s and 1960s. Since 1972, Neri has worked with the same model, Mary Julia, creating drawings and plaster figures that merge contemporary sculptural concerns with classical forms. The anatomical skill of these works recalls the sculptures and drawings of Rodin, Giacometti and Degas. The fragile nature of his plaster sculptures led him to cast some of the plasters in bronze, which became a vehicle for color to emphasize surfaces and form.  Neri lives in the San Francisco Bay Area, and also has a studio in Carrara, Italy, where he spends several months each year creating sculptures in marble.

Jane Frank

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Jane Frank (Jane Schenthal Frank) the American artist, was born Jane Babette Schenthal on July 25, 1918, in Baltimore, Maryland, and died in Baltimore on May 31, 1986. She is known as a painter, sculptor, mixed media artist, and textile artist. A pupil of Hans Hofmann, she can in much of her work be categorized stylistically as an abstract expressionist, but one who draws primary inspiration from the natural world, particularly landscape — landscape “as metaphor”, she once explained. Her later painting refers more explicitly to aerial landscapes, while her sculpture tends toward minimalism. Chronologically and stylistically, Jane Frank’s work in totality straddles both the modern and the contemporary (even postmodern) periods. She referred to her works generally as “inscapes”.

Jane Frank’s paintings and mixed media works on canvas are in the collections of the Corcoran Gallery of Art (”Amber Ambience”, 1964), the Smithsonian American Art Museum (”Frazer’s Hog Cay #18?, 1968) , the Baltimore Museum of Art (”Winter’s End”, 1958), the Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University (”Red Painting”, 1967), the Arkansas Arts Center (AAC: image here) in Little Rock (”Web Of Rock”, 1960), and the Evansville Museum (”Quarry III”, 1963). Her works are in many other public, academic, corporate, and private collections.

Fernando Ferreira de Araujo

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b. 1962 in Brazil. Lives and works in New York City.

Artist Statement:

“I’ve been paiting for almost 18 years. Painting, to me, is basically an intuitive process, I always find myself guided by intuition and led by emotion. As opposed to wide and long heavy brush strokes, I used to have, I now tend to adopt more of a bleeding technique to achieve the same sensation and connection with my inner self. Even though my ongoing series has a strong link to my cultural background, New York has greatly influenced my perspective. Adopting acrylic and new ways of paintings in order to adapt represent the essence of evolution in my work without losing my identity and artist calligraphy. I see each one of my work as a surprise with its own personal and intuitive meaning. After brainstorming feelings and memories, they evolve freely and independently. As opposed to being in charge I’m almost as taken by the strokes, free, at the same time unaware of what’s coming next, being almost impossible to realize when to rest the brush.”  

www.fernandoaraujo.net


Bill Gingles

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Artist Statement: 

“At its core, my work is about the duality of existence: positive/negative, male/female, physical/spiritual and the dynamics that occur when they converge or mix like the spirituality of sex or the effects of time on people and things. Yet it’s the unexpected that I find most compelling about painting. Not just a simple surprise but the fact that I can surprise myself, like one does in having dreams.” 

 www.billgingles.net

Stefan Beltzig

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Born in Bavaria in 1944, the son of a Berlin film maker and a dealer of Oriental Antiquities, Stefan Beltzig attempted at first to turn his back on theartistic milieu in which he was raised, dropped out of school and joined a circustroop as an acrobat. After leading the life of a vagabond, which enabled him totravel in India and the Near East, he began to study art. From 1963 to 1964 he worked at Shiraz and Isfahan in Iran where he took up ceramics and sculpture. After a formal study in arts and graduating from the Academy of Art in Munich with First Prize in painting in 1973, he began to emphasize realism and trompe l’oeil- effects in his works. Stefan Beltzig seems to be drawn to environments in transition. His work often depicts surroundings which are poised momentarily, yet hint of their transience.       

 www.stefanbeltzig.com

Sam Dolman

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Sam Dolman was born in Scunthorpe North Lincolnshire, where he lived until he was 18. He then moved to Newcastle-upon-Tyne to study Accountancy, where he spent the next four years. After graduating it soon became apparent that figures were not the life for him. Following a year in Leeds and a period of travelling through Europe he settled in Spain where he began his artistic journey. He began to teach himself the techniques that are now synonymous with his unique style. Realising his true calling in life - he returned to England to settle in Sheffield with new found motivation.
Art was always an interest in his life from an early age, having come from a creative family. His father Eric was a professional Opera singer and mother Lynn has painted most of her life. Both have now moved to the southern mountain ranges of Spain. Needless to say this is always a welcome place for Sam to relax, capture his thoughts and gain inspiration.

www.samdolman.co.uk

Adam Mickiewicz

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Born 1954, Wroclaw, Poland. Lives and works in Wroclaw. Members of The Association of Polish Artist and Designers.1980 - 1983 University Adam Mickiewicz, Poznan1980 - 1985 University of Wroclaw1994 - 1995 Graphic Practice on Academy of Fine Arts Wroclaw.

Artist Statement:

”My mind has always perceived painting as a process in which I am lucky to participate. It is wonderful to realise that one represents a tiny moment in this animation, which has continued on the earth for many thousands of years. The pigment, paste and the surface remain equally important as they were thousands of years ago. Nothing much has changed in this respect at all. I find the colours of the earth very close: ochres, siennas, umbers, and sepias. They beautifully render the mood of flowing time.” 

www.galeriam.com